On Thursday, the Los Angeles Police Department will hold its first press conference detailing the arrest on Wednesday of a suspect in the "Grim Sleeper" slayings. The families of many victims will be there to offer their thoughts on the arrest.

In interviews, some family members expressed joy that closure might finally come -- but it was joy mixed with anger because the suspect turned out to be a resident of the neighborhood, described by those who lived near him as a kind and generous neighbor.

The suspect is Lonnie David Franklin Jr., 57. Police said DNA
evidence linked him to the killings.

Relatives of the victims said there was a period of time when they lost faith in the system. But when the slayings continued and police concluded they were the work of a serial killer, the families said police redoubled their efforts.

Alicia Monique
Alexander, 18, was one of the Grim Sleeper's first victims, killed in
1988.
Her brothers Donnell Alexander, 47, and Darin Alexander, 45, said
they “never gave up hope. We were just hoping with all the new
technology out now with DNA testing that they would get him. This
brought us closer together. That’s the positive that came out of her
death. Now we hug one other not just on special occasions but every
day.”

“This won’t bring our sister back, but our heart goes out to all the
families that were as affected,” Donnell Alexander said.

Franklin was a garage attendant at the LAPD's 77th Street Division
station in the early 1980s, according to city and police sources. He
worked as a garbage collector for the Los Angeles Department of
Sanitation during the years that the first eight killings occurred. The
string of slayings
began with the death of Jackson on Aug. 10, 1985, and ended with
the death of Alexander on Sept. 11, 1988.

Franklin has at least four prior convictions, two for felony possession
of stolen property in 1993 and 2003, one for misdemeanor battery in
1997 and one for misdemeanor assault in 1999, according to court
records. He was sentenced to a year in jail for the first stolen-property charge and 270 days for the second one.

Three years ago, Janecia LaVette Peters was found dead at Western
Avenue near 92nd Street in South Los Angeles. She had been shot in the
back and stuffed into a trash bag. She was considered the most recent
victim of the Grim Sleeper serial killer.

Her aunt, Diane McQueen, 55, said the slaying shattered her family. "She was 25. It hit my family real hard. I had lost hope this day
would come. I feel a lot of joy it did at last."

[Updated at 8:14 a.m.: Diana Ware, 71, the stepmother of Barbara Ware, who was killed two days after turning 23 years old in 1987, also was uplifted by the arrest.

“I hadn’t lost hope, but I got discouraged,” she said. “You get discouraged sometimes because it was taking a long time. But the detectives never gave up and kept in touch with us.”

On Wednesday, the call finally came. "The detective called me. He said, ‘Are you sitting down?' " Ware said. "I just yelled. I was so happy."]